Bill Clinton makes big gesture at Shanksville memorial

Donors have contributed $52 million to build the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., but $10 million is still needed. Former President Bill Clinton declared Saturday that he and Speaker of the House John Boehner are going to do something about that.

“Since I am no longer in office, I can do unpopular things,” Clinton declared at the end of his remarks at Saturday’s dedication ceremony.

“I told the Secretary of the Interior, the head of your development program, that I was aghast to find out we still need to raise $10 million to finish this place. And Speaker Boehner and I have already volunteered to do a bipartisan event in Washington and let’s get this show on the road. Let’s roll.”

“Are you guys ready? OK. Let's roll!" was the last thing Todd Beamer, one of the passengers resisting hijackers aboard Flight 93, said, overheard by a telephone operator. He and others were preparing to charge the cockpit.

“Let’s roll” became a battle cry that resonated with Americans in the days after 9/11. The terrorists who hijacked Flight 93 planned to crash it into the White House or the U.S. Capitol, the 9/11 Commission later concluded. But passengers aboard the plane learned of the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks via cell phone calls and formed a plan to fight back.

About 4,000 people gathered Saturday for the somber ceremony to honor the valor and dedication of the 40 people who died when the 757 slammed into the ground at 500 mph.